On the train to Haifa I think about my father in wartime Palestine, a different time, a different name but the same place.
His memories of oranges and beaches and warm, Mediterranean swimming are the times he chose to rescue from the six years when the world was drowning in its own blood.
The weather is blue and grey but the sun shines like my fatherβs medals on his blue-grey air force uniform that entranced me as a child.
As the helicopter gunships prowl over Mount Carmel, speeding north to Lebanon, I wonder what times I will choose to rescue from a land built out of longing, but paid for in blood.
Copyright Andrew M. Bell. The poet wishes to acknowledge The Press in whose pages this poem first appeared.